This beautiful and popular map depicts the famous Kingdom of
Prester John along with much of eastern and central Africa.
Much has been written about this map. The myth of Prester John, the good king defeating
the enemies of Christianity, was in part a
response to Mongol and Islamic pressures on
Christian Europe. For centuries, from the receipt of a
fake letter from Prester John to the Byzantine Patriarch,
Europeans searched for Prester John, initially in Asia and
then in East Africa. Europe hoped that
Prester John and his vast army would join with Europeans in
the protection of the Holy Lands from the Islamic Saracens and
in the protection of all Europe from the Mongols. In the late
1400s and early 1500s, the Portuguese searched vainly for
Prester John in East Africa, through they did eventually find
a Christian kingdom in Abyssinia.
A
dedication to King David of the Bible is in the
upper left of map; above the dedication is the
coat of arms of Prester John. Elephants and other
figures adorn the map.
This map first appeared in
Ortelius Additamentum in 1573 and then in
all later editions of his Theatrum Orbis Terrarum to 1612.
Ortelius' Theatrum Orbis Terrarum was the first
atlas that produced a uniform series of maps of the world. The
publication of the Theatrum.Orbis Terrarum can be
considered the starting point for over 100 years of Dutch
supremacy in the production of beautiful maps and atlases.
Latin text on verso with a
signature of page "107". Based on van den Broecke, this map is from the
1592 edition of the Theatrum.
References:
Norwich, map #11. Van den Broecke, map #175.
Krogt, Peter van der. Koeman's Atlantes Neerlandici, vol. 3
(Ortelius). 't Goy-Houten: HES Publishers, 2003.
For further information on Prester John, see Silverberg,
Robert. The Realm of Prester John. Athens,
Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1972.
Original Color Example in
Fine Condition. Small repair on verso to separation on
bottom centerfold.
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